Manual On Material Flow Cost Accounting ISO14051-2014 PDF
Manual On Material Flow Cost Accounting ISO14051-2014 PDF
Manual On Material Flow Cost Accounting ISO14051-2014 PDF
TOKYO
Hiroshi Tachikawa, Japan, served as the volume editor.
The views expressed in this publication do not necessarily reflect the official views
of the Asian Productivity Organization (APO) or any APO member. The APO is not
responsible for the accuracy, usability, and safety of its contents.
All rights reserved. None of the contents of this publication may be used, reproduced,
stored, or transferred in any form or by any means for commercial purposes without
prior written permission from the APO.
500.09.2014
Foreword v
Material flow cost accounting (MFCA), developed in Germany in the late 1990s and
since adopted widely in Japan, focuses on tracing waste, emissions, and nonproducts
and can help boost an organizations economic and environmental performance. It is
one of the major tools of environmental management accounting (EMA). EMA is a set
of procedures used within enterprises for linking environmental considerations with
economic objectives. Today, organizations cannot ignore the environmental aspects
of their activities. Consequently, they seek management tools to link concern for
the environment with their bottom lines. MFCA is a management tool that promotes
the efficient use of materials more effectively, contributing to reductions in waste,
emissions, and nonproducts. MFCA increases the transparency of material flow,
which is a key to successful problem-solving and improvement. By solving problems,
organizations can increase their resource productivity and reduce costs at the same
time. This is in line with the Green Productivity (GP) concept and can be used to
implement GP in organizations and factories. The Government of Japan is currently
taking steps to enhance understanding of MFCA and to accelerate its widespread
adoption. MFCA is already in place in more than 300 Japanese companies.
To standardize MFCA practices, a working group of the ISO Technical Committee ISO/
TC 207, Environmental Management, developed ISO 14051, which complements the
ISO 14000 family of environmental management system standards, including life
cycle assessment (ISO 14040, ISO 14044) and environmental performance evaluation
(ISO 14031). The standard was published in the second half of 2011. MFCA has been
receiving increasing attention throughout the Asia-Pacific, including APO member
countries, along with national environmental management concerns. The APO
organized a series of training courses and workshops on MFCA starting from 2011 and
offered a self-learning e-course in 2013.
This Manual on Material Flow Cost Accounting was prepared based on feedback from
and needs of APO member countries. I hope that the publication will be useful to
GP/MFCA practitioners and professionals while promoting sustainable development
practices in the region.
Mari Amano
Secretary-General
Tokyo
September 2014
v
INTRODUCTION: GREEN PRODUCTIVITY AND MFCA
K. D. Bhardwaj
APO Senior Program Officer
Green Productivity (GP) was defined by a group of APO experts as a strategy for
enhancing productivity and environmental performance for sustainable socioeconomic
development. It is the application of appropriate productivity and environmental
management tools, techniques, and technologies to reduce the environmental impact
of an organizations activities, products, and services.
GP is not a new concept but has emerged gradually from the basic concept of
productivity. GP integrates the productivity and environmental concepts to produce
goods in cleaner, greener ways. This also ensures reduced environmental burden and
input costs, along with improved quality and profitability. It is especially important for
small-scale industries because it concentrates upon the preventive approach.
NEED FOR GP
To some ex tent, pr oduc tivit y prac tices like pr eventive maintenance, good
housekeeping, etc. reduce environmental burdens. However, productivity practices and
pollution prevention programs alone cannot manage the total environment and sustain
development. There is a need to integrate productivity improvement into pollution
prevention and control programs for sustainability.
vii
The need for a fundamental change by moving businesses toward resource efficiency
and taking a holistic life-cycle view of products was recognized in the 1990s. Resource
efficiency not only leads to conservation of natural resources but also results in
improved productivity and environmental performance. Therefore, if development is
to be sustainable, we must move beyond preventive approaches and ensure that both
productivity improvement and environmental protection are achieved simultaneously.
Recognizing this, the APO has integrated this approach into the concept of GP.
The goal of GP is to achieve higher levels of productivity to serve the needs of society
and to protect and enhance the quality of environment both locally and globally. GP
leads to gains in profitability through improvements in productivity and environmental
performance. In other words, GP can improve the bottom line of every sector of society.
TRIPLE FOCUS OF GP
GP recognizes the importance of both the environment and development, and the
concept of GP shows that for any development strategy to be sustainable it must have
a focus on quality, profitability, and the environment. Quality is dictated by the voice of
the customer for both goods and services. GP works at ensuring quality by promoting
the use of newer, safer materials, increasing processing and production efficiency, and
improving working conditions.
The intent of GP is thus to provide the consumer with more performance and value
with the use of fewer resources, including energy, and the creation of less waste i.e.,
doing more with less.
This makes sense both for the environment and for business. Natural resources are
conserved, thereby reducing environmental degradation in many ways. The cost of
production is also reduced, thereby ensuring profitability. Savings may also come
from lower waste management costs or take the form of avoiding the cost of potential
environmental liabilities.
viii
BENEFITS OF GP
Implementation of the GP strategy will have both immediate and long-term benefits.
The benefits accrue to producers as well as to consumers and include increased
efficiency gains in resource use, lower costs of production, decreased costs of waste
treatment and disposal, and better quality of products.
The adoption and practice of GP will also provide businesses with a competitive
advantage. It will increase productivity growth rates in business, as a result of which
market share and profitability increase. This shift toward integrating the environment
and productivity enabled by GP has much greater implications for businesses,
par ticularly in developing economies due to their technological and resource
constraints. Opening of world markets and increased globalization have intensified the
pressures on businesses, as they must meet international expectations. Workers will
benefit from GP because it improves not only the workplace but also the health and
safety of the labor force.
GP METHODOLOGY
Step 2: Planning
Using the information gained in the walk-through survey along with a number of
analytical tools such as material balance, benchmarking, eco-mapping, and Ishikawa
diagrams, problems and their causes are identified and analyzed. Following this,
objectives and targets are set to address the problem areas. Performance indicators
are also identified.
ix
Step 4: Implementation of GP Options
The implementation of the selected GP options involves two steps: preparation and
execution. Preparatory steps include training, awareness building, and competence
development. They are followed by the installation of equipment and systems along
with operator instruction and hands-on training.
Step 6: Sustaining GP
In light of the findings of the GP evaluation, corrective actions can be taken to keep
the GP program on target. In some cases, targets and objectives themselves will have
to be modified. As the program progresses, a feedback system should be implemented
so that new problems and challenges will be highlighted and dealt with. In this way,
the GP cycle will loop back to the relevant step to implement a process of continuous
improvement and ensure the continuing relevance and effectiveness of the GP process.
Figure 2: GP Methodology
x
GREEN PRODUCTIVITY AND MATERIAL FLOW COST ACCOUNTING
MFCA, developed in Germany in the late 1990s and since adopted widely in Japan,
focuses on tracing waste, emissions, and nonproducts and can help boost an
organizations economic and environmental performance. It is one of the major tools of
environmental management accounting (EMA). EMA is a set of procedures used within
corporations and other organizations for linking environmental considerations with
economic objectives. Today, organizations cannot ignore the environmental aspects
of their activities. Consequently, they seek management tools to link concern for the
environment with economic considerations.
MFCA is a management tool that increases the transparency of material flow, which
is a key to successful problem solving and improvement. By solving problems,
organizations can increase their resource productivity and reduce costs at the
same time. This is in line with the GP concept and can be used to implement GP in
organizations and factories.
xi
BASIC MANUAL ON MATERIAL FLOW COST ACCOUNTING
(ISO 14051)
This manual was prepared to provide basic knowledge and understanding of material
flow cost accounting (MFCA). It intends to be a manual that is comprehensive, up to
date, and consistent with ISO 14051. It is recognized that:
This manual is not intended to be the one and only manual on learning and applying
MFCA.
Learning levels and progress depend on the individuals learning abilities and
exposures to the subject matter.
Gaining practical experience through project implementation after formal training
will greatly increase the speed and level of competency.
Sole reliance on the manual is not advisable.
Measuring, analyzing, and applying practical solutions to problems are subject to
local conditions where MFCA is practiced and applied.
xii
MODULE 1: GENERAL CONCEPT OF MFCA
WHAT IS MFCA?
MFCA is one of the major tools for environmental management accounting and
promotes increased transparency of material use practices through the development
of a material flow model that traces and quantifies the flows and stocks of materials
within an organization in physical and monetary units.
The method was originally developed in Germany and has been further developed in
Japan. The inclusion of MFCA in the International Organization for Standardization
(ISO) was an initiative from Japan. ISO 14051 was issued in 2011.
MFCA measures the flow and stock of all materials in the manufacturing process in
both monetary and physical terms. The materials include raw materials, parts, and
components. MFCA analysis provides an equivalent comparison of costs associated
with products and costs associated with material losses, for example, waste, air
emissions, wastewater, etc. In many cases, an organization is unaware of the full
extent of the actual cost of material losses because data on material losses and
the associated costs are often difficult to extract from conventional information,
accounting, and environmental management systems. In this way, MFCA enables
organizations to identify material use and their flows within a production process and
assign costs to all of these materials.
MFCA identifies quantities of each material and its costs (including material,
processing, and waste treatment costs). This enables us to look at each of the sources
of waste generation in a separate way and identify improvement opportunities that
could lead to the reduction of waste generation itself.
Using this information, organizations can identify the costs of losses caused by waste
and other emissions, as well as defective products, and calculate the quantities and
resources used in each process and the costs associated with these processes. MFCA
1
acts as a strong motivation for organizations to reduce waste and material inputs,
leading to cost reductions and increased productivity.
While MFCA is primarily designed for use within a single facility or organization, the
approach can be extended to multiple organizations within the supply chain, enabling
them to develop an integrated approach for more efficient use of materials and energy.
2
MODULE 2: CHARACTERISTICS OF MFCA
The differences between MFCA and conventional cost accounting do not mean that MFCA
cannot be applied to any organization that uses materials and energy. In other words,
MFCA does not demand any specific requirement in regard to the type of product,
service, size, structure, or location. In addition, MFCA can be expanded to multiple
organizations belonging to the supply chain. This will enable the organizations to identify
even more opportunities for material reduction as well as higher energy efficiency.
Wider MFCA scope than that for a single entity is especially helpful because waste
generation in an organization is occasionally derived from materials provided by a
supplier or demanded by customers/consumers (Clause A, ISO 14051:2011).
3
MODULE 3: ISO 14051: SCOPE, TERMS, AND DEFINITIONS
1. Material
Material refers to any raw material, auxiliary material, component, catalyzer, or part
that is used to manufacture a product. Any material that does not become part of
the final product is considered material loss. In any process, waste and resource loss
occur in different steps of the process, including:
2. Flow
MFCA traces all input materials that flow through production processes and measures
products and material loss (waste) in physical units using the following equation:
The starting point of MFCA is to measure the amount of material losses based on
mass balance. The concept is illustrated in Figure 2. In this case, the amount of the
material loss (30 tons) is calculated based on the amount of total input and products
in a selected part of a process in which the inputs and outputs are quantified. This
part of the process is defined as a quantity center in MFCA (i.e., Material loss = Input -
Products), as Figure 2 shows.
4
Manual on Material Flow Cost Accounting (ISO 14051)
3. Cost Accounting
Under MFCA, the flows and stocks of materials within an organization are traced and
quantified in physical units (e.g., mass, volume) and then assigned an associated cost.
Under MFCA, four types of costs are quantified: material costs, system costs, energy
costs, and waste management costs. Each cost is defined as follows:
Material cost: cost for a substance that goes through a quantit y center
(measurement unit of input and output for MFCA analysis). Typically, the purchase
cost is used as the material cost.
Energy cost: cost for energy sources such as electricity, fuels, steam, heat,
compressed air.
System cost: cost incurred in the course of in-house handling of the material flows,
excluding material cost, energy cost, and waste management cost.
Waste management cost: cost for handling material losses.
Following identification of a physical unit for material flow data, material costs, energy
costs, and system costs are subsequently assigned or allocated to quantity center
outputs (i.e., products and material losses) based on the proportion of the material
input that flows into product and material loss. For example, as illustrated in Figure
3, of the 100 tons of material used, 70 tons flow into product and 30 tons flow into
material loss. Thus, the material distribution percentages of 70% and 30% are used to
allocate energy and system costs to the product and material loss, respectively. In this
example, the material distribution percentage based on mass is used to allocate these
costs. On the other hand, in Figure 3, all waste management costs of $100,000 are
attributed to material loss, since the costs are caused solely by material losses. In the
final analysis, the total cost of material losses in this example is $520,000. This cost is
not separated but included in the cost of the product in conventional costing; the cost
for material loss is not considered except in MFCA.
5
Manual on Material Flow Cost Accounting (ISO 14051)
The resulting cost of the material loss can become an incentive for organizations and
managers to reduce operation costs by reducing material losses. Therefore, it can
be said that MFCA can help organizations simultaneously achieve financial benefits
and control of material losses (i.e., more effective resource use) (Clause 5.3, ISO
14051:2011).
6
MODULE 4: ISO 14051: OBJECTIVES AND PRINCIPLES OF MFCA
PRINCIPLES OF MFCA
(Clause 4.2, ISO 14051:2011)
MFCA can be used to increase the transparency of material flows and energy
use, along with the associated costs and environmental impacts, and to support
organizational decisions through information obtained through MFCA. This can be
achieved by following the four core principles of MFCA methodology.
7
MODULE 5: ISO 14051: FUNDAMENTAL ELEMENTS OF MFCA
MFCA brings about both environmental and cost-reduction impacts on the organization.
In order to apply MFCA to an organization effectively, the concepts of quantity center,
material balance, cost calculation, and material flow model shown in Figure 5 need to
be incorporated.
Furthermore, the quantity centers within the MFCA boundary can be based on
existing production management information, cost center records, and other existing
information. Generally, quantity centers are established in all processes where relevant
material losses or system costs, such as energy for transport, oil, or air pressure
leakages, are identified, then the appropriate process is selected as an additional
quantity center and its inputs and outputs are determined. Typical examples of
quantity centers include points where materials are stocked and/or transformed, such
as storage, production units, waste management, and shipping/receiving points.
Once the inputs and outputs have been identified for each quantity center, they can
be used to connect the quantity centers within the boundary so that data from the
quantity centers can be linked and evaluated across the entire system within the
scope. It is important that material balance be ensured to evaluate material efficiency
in physical and monetary units. The concept of material balance is described in the
following section, Fundamental Element 2: Material balance.
8
Module 5: ISO 14051: Fundamental Elements of MFCA
For each quantity center, the amounts of inputs and outputs should be quantified in
physical units. All physical units should be convertible to a single standardized unit
(e.g., mass) so that material balances can be conducted for each quantity center. It is
preferable to use existing on-site basic units for production management.
A material balance requires that the total amount of outputs (i.e., products and
material losses) be equal to the total amount of inputs, taking into account any
inventory changes within the quantity center. Ideally, all materials within the MFCA
boundary should be traced and quantified. However, in reality, materials that have
minimal environmental or financial significance can be excluded.
Material costs;
Energy costs;
System costs; and
Waste management costs.
Figure 7 shows an example of cost calculation based on the material balance at one
quantity center in which the total costs of the quantity center are allocated to the
outputs based on the proportion of inputs that becomes a product and the proportion
that becomes part of the material losses.
9
Manual on Material Flow Cost Accounting (ISO 14051)
Figure 8. Example of a material flow model for a process within the MFCA boundary.
10
MODULE 6: ISO 14051: MFCA IMPLEMENTATION STEPS
Furthermore, MFCA can be easily integrated into other EMS as it incorporates the Plan-
Do-Check-Act (PDCA) continual improvement cycle, which is a common approach in many
EMS. MFCA can provide additional information in each of the stages of the PDCA cycle
and enhance the existing EMS. For example, the use of MFCA allows the organization
to include financial considerations in setting objectives and targets. The knowledge of
potential environmental impacts and financial impacts can enhance the quality of the
evaluation, providing useful information for an organizations decision-making.
Successful projects usually start with support from the companys management; MFCA
is not an exception. If the company management understands the benefits of MFCA
and its usefulness in achieving an organizations environmental and financial targets,
it is easier to gain commitment from the whole organization. In order to be effectively
implemented, it is highly recommended that top management take the lead in MFCA
implementation by assigning roles and responsibilities, including setting up an MFCA
project implementation team, providing resources, monitoring progress, reviewing
results, and deciding on improvement measures based on the MFCA results.
11
Manual on Material Flow Cost Accounting (ISO 14051)
Operational expertise on the flow of input materials and energy use throughout the
target process;
Technical expertise on material-related implications of processes, including
combustion and other chemical reactions;
Quality control expertise on various issues, such as frequency of product rejects,
causes, as well as rework activities, maintenance, and other quality assurance data;
Environmental expertise on environmental impacts; and
Accounting expertise on cost accounting data.
Based on collected material flow data, the MFCA boundary needs to be specified to
understand clearly the scale of MFCA activity. During implementation, it is usually
recommended to focus on specific products or processes at the beginning and then
expanding implementation to other products. By implementing MFCA in steps, the
analysis is simplified and better results can be achieved.
The boundary can be limited to a single process, multiple processes, an entire facility,
or a supply chain. It is recommended that the process or processes that are chosen
for initial implementation be the ones with potentially significant environmental and
economic impacts. After specifying the boundary, the process should be classified in
quantity centers using process information and procurement records. In MFCA, the
quantity center is the part of the process in which inputs and outputs are quantified.
In most cases, quantity centers represent parts of the process in which materials are
transformed. If the material flow between two processes is the source of significant
material loss, the flow can be classified as a separate material flow.
After determining the boundary and quantity centers, a time period for MFCA data
collection needs to be specified. While MFCA does not indicate the period during which
data must be collected for analysis, it should be sufficiently long to allow meaningful
data to be collected and to minimize the impact of any significant process variation
that can affect the reliability and usability of the data, such as seasonal fluctuations.
Several historical MFCA projects indicate that the appropriate data collection period
can be as short as a month, with a half-year or a year of data collection being the
most common.
In MFCA, production, recycling, and other systems are represented by visual models
that illustrate MFCA boundary and multiple quantity centers where materials are
stocked, used, or transformed, as well as the movements of materials between those
quantity centers.
12
Module 6: ISO 14051: MFCA Implementation Steps
Figure 10. Material flow model for a process within the MFCA boundary.
Figure 10 shows a general material flow system. The material flow model is useful to
provide an overview of an entire process and to identify the points where material
losses occur. Products include finished products from the entire system, intermediate
products, and material inputs to other quantity centers. For each quantity center,
material balance-based verification should be conducted to understand material-related
efficiency. The material flow model is not necessarily visualized by computer; the model
can be made on paper and with Post-It Notes for discussion among project members.
Material cost: cost for a substance that enters and/or leaves a quantity center
Energy cost: cost for electricity, fuel, steam, heat, and compressed air
System cost: Cost of labor, cost of depreciation and maintenance, and cost of transport
Waste management cost: cost of handling waste generated in a quantity center
Material costs, energy costs, and system costs are assigned or allocated to either
products or material losses at each quantity center based on the proportion of the
material input that flows into product and material loss. The material costs for each
input and output flow are quantified by multiplying the physical amount of the material
flow by the unit cost of the material over the time period chosen for the analysis. When
quantifying the material costs for products and material losses, the material costs
associated with any changes in material inventory within the quantity center should
also be quantified. In contrast to material, energy, and system costs that are assigned
to products and material losses proportionally, 100% of the waste management costs
are attributed to material loss, since the costs represent the costs of managing this
material loss.
In most cases, costs such as energy costs, system costs, and waste management
costs are only available for an entire process or facility, and allocating or attributing
these costs to each specific product and material loss is challenging. If costs for each
13
Manual on Material Flow Cost Accounting (ISO 14051)
1. Allocation of overall (e.g., process-wide, facility-wide) costs to each quantity center; and
2. Allocation of costs to products and material losses
Each organization will need to decide the allocation criteria that best fits its needs
and the scope of the project. Accordingly, during each allocation step, an appropriate
allocation criterion should be selected. The criterion chosen should reflect the costs
being allocated as closely to the real process as possible.
When process-wide or facility-wide costs are being allocated to quantity centers, machine
hours, production volume, number of employees, labor hours, number of jobs performed,
or floor space can be considered as appropriate examples of allocation criteria. For the
second step, allocation of costs in a quantity center to products and material losses, it is
common to allocate costs based on the material distribution percentage. In other words,
costs follow the same ratio as the material balance in physical units.
Once costs have been allocated to all inputs, the cost analysis should be incorporated
to the material flow analysis. By doing so, the output from one quantity center
becomes the input of the following quantity center. The material cost that enters a
quantity center should reflect the combination of the material costs, energy costs,
and system costs from the previous quantity center. Carryover cost items can be
expressed separately as material cost, energy cost, and system cost.
Through the identification of MFCA issues that lead to material losses, organizations
have a chance to identify the resulting economic loss, which is usually overlooked
when relying solely on conventional cost accounting.
While most organizations monitor the yield rate associated with the materials used
in the process, the general scope of such monitoring only covers the main materials,
processes, or losses in many cases. They often control the main materials without
monitoring the amounts of use or loss in auxiliary or operating materials. On-site
operators may see materials being lost, whereas managers of the manufacturing,
production engineering, and product design departments are not aware of such losses.
This happens because the organizations conventional management practices only
focus on the handling of waste when there are costs associated with its management.
In such cases, MFCA helps organizations highlight uncontrolled material losses.
14
Module 6: ISO 14051: MFCA Implementation Steps
The physical and monetary quantification of the material flow can be summarized in a
format that is suitable for further interpretation, for example, in a material flow cost
matrix. The data should first be summarized for each quantity center separately. Table
2 illustrates a format of the summary of the MFCA data for a quantity center.
Waste
Cost Material Energy System Total
management
In general, the review and interpretation of summarized data will allow the organization
to identify quantity centers with material losses that have a significant environmental
or financial impact. These quantity centers can be analyzed in more detail (i.e., root
cause for sources of material loss). Data from individual quantity centers can also be
aggregated for the entire target process being analyzed.
After the MFCA analysis is completed, the results should be communicated to all
relevant stakeholders. In addition, management can use MFCA information to support
many different types of decisions aimed at improving both environmental and financial
performance. Communicating the results to the organizations employees can be useful
in explaining any process or organizational changes and gain full commitment from all
members of the organization (Clauses 6.9, 6.10, ISO 14051:2011).
MFCA data can be used to support the cost-benefit analysis of proposed measures,
both those requiring additional investment and those requiring little or no initial
investment (e.g., process standardization, process improvement).
can be pursued. Possible system improvements that are discovered during MFCA
implementation must be noted and included in the overall analysis.
By applying MFCA, financial costs such as processing and material losses are identified.
In many cases, the scale of the identified costs is more significant than previously
assumed. At the same time, MFCA presents an ultimate target for engineers: the zero
material loss cost, which can encourage the organization to make a breakthrough in
the recognition of the necessity for improvement. The typical losses identified by MFCA
include the following:
Furthermore, companies are often unaware of losses associated with recyclable waste
because such waste is reused as resources and sometimes sold as valuable material to
external recyclers.
16
MFCA CASE EXAMPLE: NITTO DENKO CORPORATION
This case example shows actual implementation of MFCA in accordance with the
implementation steps described in the previous section.
At the time, the company was looking for alternatives for its existing conventional
environmental accounting, when METI introduced MFCA to Nitto. At the initial phase
of the project, top management (CEO of the company) showed strong interest in and
commitment to the project. One of the reasons for the strong CEO commitment was
17
Manual on Material Flow Cost Accounting (ISO 14051)
For full implementation of the project, the CEO designated a main key person in the
field of the sustainability management as team leader. The implementation team
leader was in charge of providing basic training to people at the manufacturing site and
guide MFCA implementation for the target process. Actual implementation activities
are described in the following sections.
Step 2: Scope and Boundary of the Process and Establishing a Material Flow
Model (Clauses 6.4, 6.5, ISO 14051:2011)
During the target product selection process, Nitto decided to focus on a product that
showed an upward trend in the market, its production lines generated a high amount
of material losses, and had production lines that consumed substantial amounts of
energy in the manufacturing process. Based on these criteria, the adhesive tape used
in electronics produced at the Toyohashi Plant was selected as the target product for
MFCA implementation.
As a first step, month-long data were collected for MFCA analysis. However,
recommended MFCA implementation should follow the PDCA continual cycle, and
therefore three-month and six-month data were collected and analyzed.
18
MFCA Case Example: Nitto Denko Corporation
Using the process flow from the adhesive tape production as shown in Figure 13, the
MFCA implementation team decided to divide the process into five quantity centers:
After the quantity centers were selected, Nitto collected data for verification of the
amount of inputs and outputs in physical units by doing a material balance.
19
Manual on Material Flow Cost Accounting (ISO 14051)
20
MFCA Case Example: Nitto Denko Corporation
All collected costs are allocated to products and to material losses following the
material flow obtained through the material balance. In this process, Nitto decided to
allocate energy costs and system costs based on the product/material loss ratio in
physical units. Following the MFCA methodology, all disposal costs were allocated to
material loss rather than using the allocation based on the proportion of material that
becomes product and material loss, as used for energy and system costs.
For the selected process, the proportion of positive products to negative products was
67.17% to 32.83%, as shown in Table 4.
Table 4. Flow cost matrix. Period: from November 1 to 30, 2000 (unit: yen).
21
Manual on Material Flow Cost Accounting (ISO 14051)
Material flow P/L (unit: yen) Material flow P/L (unit: yen)
*Provisional figure.
Source: Nitto Denko Corporation.
Under material flow PL, the cost of goods sold (cost of positive products) and the cost
of waste (cost of negative products) were calculated as 3,037,498 and 1,484,670,
respectively. Assuming that total sales were 15,000,000 and sales and administrative
costs were 8,000,000, the operating income was 2,478,032.
In the material flow PL, a clear distinction between the cost of positive and negative
products was seen. Nitto was able to identify the real costs of the negative products
and work on strategies to increase its profits by reducing the cost of negative
products. The material flow PL was used by the implementation team as a tool to
stimulate the rest of the organization to consider how to convert the cost of negative
products into profits and to direct their attention to continuous improvement.
Under conventional cost accounting, all costs were allocated to the final product.
Conventional cost accounting considers that only finished (non-defective) products
have the capacity to recover the cost of goods that were used. Costs associated with
material loss, such as unused materials, are usually included under the production
costs. Through the conventional cost accounting, costs for the material loss remain
hidden and cannot be fully understood. Conversely, MFCA provides information not
only on the costs associated with the final product but also with the material loss. The
difference between MFCA-based PL and conventional PL is shown in Table 5.
22
MFCA Case Example: Nitto Denko Corporation
The proportion of positive products increased by 10%. There was, however, much
room for improvement and the company decided to introduce a continuous MFCA
analysis in this process. Improvement targets are updated on a yearly basis.
23
Manual on Material Flow Cost Accounting (ISO 14051)
Table 6. Implementation results: Improvement of material productivity through MFCA by Nitto (cost basis).
In MFCA, processing costs and indirect costs that are included in waste, such as
system costs, are also taken into account. This enables companies to clarify the costs
associated with emissions as waste. In other words, there are no losses that are
ignored as in conventional cost accounting and all losses are within the scope targeted
for improvement.
Material flow data, which recognize the quantity and cost of waste via each quantity
center, provide a clear picture of the issues and bottlenecks in the manufacturing
process. By settling such issues and converting the flow of negative products into
positive products, companies can simultaneously achieve a reduction in environmental
impact and an increase in profit.
This also enables companies to recognize that the cost of waste will vary depending on
where it is generated, even if the total quantity of waste remains constant. From this
point of view, companies can comprehend which manufacturing processes most need
improvement or reform, and it becomes possible to estimate a pertinent investment
amount and secure funds for such investments.
24
MFCA Case Example: Nitto Denko Corporation
Figure 16 shows the summary of the implementation of MFCA and how Nitto was able
to identify material losses that served as valuable information for capital investment
decisions and achieving lower costs and fewer environmental impacts.
25